Definition of "transcendental" noun plural transcendentals
adjective comparative more transcendental , superlative most transcendental
(philosophy) Concerned with the a priori or intuitive basis of knowledge , independent of experience . quotations examples
Quotations The best way to demonstrate the possibility of something is to show its actuality , for actuality implies possibility . At least since Kant , transcendental philosophies have been on the scene . However , such simple demonstration of the possibility of transcendental philosophy has not been effective and is not likely to be so — so strong is the presumption that transcendental philosophy just could not be possible , or , if it was possible earlier , it is not possible now .
1985, J. N. Mohanty, The Possibility of Transcendental Philosophy, Kluwer Academic (Martinus Nijhoff), page xiii
Not only does Heidegger 's early work stand within the framework of transcendental phenomenology as established by Husserl —even though it also contests and revises that framework —but that thinking also stands in a close relationship to the critical philosophy of Immanuel Kant , and specifically to the transcendental project , and modes of argument , of Kant 's Critique of Pure Reason .
2007, Steven Crowell, Jeff Malpas, Chapter 1: Introduction Steven Crowell, Jeff Malpas, (editors), Transcendental Heidegger, Stanford University Press, page 1
(algebra, number theory, field theory, of a number or an element of an extension field) Not algebraic (i .e ., not the root of any polynomial that has positive degree and rational coefficients ). quotations examples
Quotations The theory of transcendental numbers was originated by Liouville in his famous memoir † of 1844 in which he obtained , for the first time , a class , très -étendue , as it was described in the title of the paper , of numbers that satisfy no algebraic equation with integer coefficients .
1975, Alan Baker, Transcendental Number Theory, 2nd edition, Cambridge University Press, published 1990, page 1